mv: ‘./input-file.zip’ and ‘./input-file.zip’ are the same file Creating study carrel named classification-HN-gutenberg Initializing database Unzipping Archive: input-file.zip creating: ./tmp/input/input-file/ inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/15487.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/15759.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/20936.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/19229.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/29393.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/28315.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/18603.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/27518.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/30432.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/22241.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/22651.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/20125.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/3540.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/3630.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/690.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/4212.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/2611.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/1187.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/1140.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/36489.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/38022.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/38086.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/42985.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/46025.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/46029.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/6885.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/36014.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/32405.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/metadata.csv caution: excluded filename not matched: *MACOSX* === DIRECTORIES: ./tmp/input === DIRECTORY: ./tmp/input/input-file === metadata file: ./tmp/input/input-file/metadata.csv === found metadata file === updating bibliographic database Building study carrel named classification-HN-gutenberg FILE: cache/3540.txt OUTPUT: txt/3540.txt FILE: cache/15487.txt OUTPUT: txt/15487.txt FILE: cache/27518.txt OUTPUT: txt/27518.txt FILE: cache/28315.txt OUTPUT: txt/28315.txt FILE: cache/29393.txt OUTPUT: txt/29393.txt FILE: cache/20936.txt OUTPUT: txt/20936.txt FILE: cache/30432.txt OUTPUT: txt/30432.txt FILE: cache/4212.txt OUTPUT: txt/4212.txt FILE: cache/20125.txt OUTPUT: txt/20125.txt FILE: cache/690.txt OUTPUT: txt/690.txt FILE: cache/19229.txt OUTPUT: txt/19229.txt FILE: cache/1140.txt OUTPUT: txt/1140.txt FILE: cache/36014.txt OUTPUT: txt/36014.txt FILE: cache/22651.txt OUTPUT: txt/22651.txt FILE: cache/6885.txt OUTPUT: txt/6885.txt FILE: cache/38086.txt OUTPUT: txt/38086.txt FILE: cache/1187.txt OUTPUT: txt/1187.txt FILE: cache/18603.txt OUTPUT: txt/18603.txt FILE: cache/15759.txt OUTPUT: txt/15759.txt FILE: cache/42985.txt OUTPUT: txt/42985.txt FILE: cache/2611.txt OUTPUT: txt/2611.txt FILE: cache/3630.txt OUTPUT: txt/3630.txt FILE: cache/46029.txt OUTPUT: txt/46029.txt FILE: cache/46025.txt OUTPUT: txt/46025.txt FILE: cache/38022.txt OUTPUT: txt/38022.txt FILE: cache/32405.txt OUTPUT: txt/32405.txt FILE: cache/22241.txt OUTPUT: txt/22241.txt FILE: cache/36489.txt OUTPUT: txt/36489.txt 3540 txt/../pos/3540.pos 3540 txt/../wrd/3540.wrd 3540 txt/../ent/3540.ent 29393 txt/../ent/29393.ent 29393 txt/../pos/29393.pos 29393 txt/../wrd/29393.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 29393 author: Clark, John Bates title: Social Justice Without Socialism date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/29393.txt cache: ./cache/29393.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'29393.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 3540 author: Tolstoy, Leo, graf title: The Census in Moscow date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/3540.txt cache: ./cache/3540.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 2 resourceName b'3540.txt' 18603 txt/../pos/18603.pos 18603 txt/../wrd/18603.wrd 20936 txt/../pos/20936.pos 20936 txt/../wrd/20936.wrd 30432 txt/../pos/30432.pos 690 txt/../pos/690.pos 30432 txt/../wrd/30432.wrd 690 txt/../wrd/690.wrd Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/txt2keywords.py", line 54, in for keyword, score in ( yake( doc, ngrams=NGRAMS, topn=TOPN ) ) : File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 96, in yake word_scores = _compute_word_scores(doc, word_occ_vals, word_freqs, stop_words) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 205, in _compute_word_scores freq_baseline = statistics.mean(freqs_nsw) + statistics.stdev(freqs_nsw) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/statistics.py", line 315, in mean raise StatisticsError('mean requires at least one data point') statistics.StatisticsError: mean requires at least one data point 2611 txt/../pos/2611.pos 18603 txt/../ent/18603.ent 30432 txt/../ent/30432.ent 20936 txt/../ent/20936.ent 15487 txt/../wrd/15487.wrd 15487 txt/../pos/15487.pos 2611 txt/../wrd/2611.wrd Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/txt2keywords.py", line 54, in for keyword, score in ( yake( doc, ngrams=NGRAMS, topn=TOPN ) ) : File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 96, in yake word_scores = _compute_word_scores(doc, word_occ_vals, word_freqs, stop_words) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 205, in _compute_word_scores freq_baseline = statistics.mean(freqs_nsw) + statistics.stdev(freqs_nsw) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/statistics.py", line 315, in mean raise StatisticsError('mean requires at least one data point') statistics.StatisticsError: mean requires at least one data point 36014 txt/../wrd/36014.wrd 690 txt/../ent/690.ent 36014 txt/../pos/36014.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 22651 author: Leacock, Stephen title: The Unsolved Riddle of Social Justice date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/22651.txt cache: ./cache/22651.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'22651.txt' 2611 txt/../ent/2611.ent 28315 txt/../pos/28315.pos 15487 txt/../ent/15487.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 690 author: Russell, Bertrand title: Proposed Roads to Freedom date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/690.txt cache: ./cache/690.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 1 resourceName b'690.txt' Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/file2bib.py", line 107, in text = textacy.preprocessing.normalize.normalize_quotation_marks( text ) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/preprocessing/normalize.py", line 32, in normalize_quotation_marks return text.translate(QUOTE_TRANSLATION_TABLE) AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'translate' === file2bib.sh === id: 18603 author: Sumner, William Graham title: What Social Classes Owe to Each Other date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/18603.txt cache: ./cache/18603.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'18603.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 4212 author: Arnold, Matthew title: Culture and Anarchy date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/4212.txt cache: ./cache/4212.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 1 resourceName b'4212.txt' Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/file2bib.py", line 107, in text = textacy.preprocessing.normalize.normalize_quotation_marks( text ) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/preprocessing/normalize.py", line 32, in normalize_quotation_marks return text.translate(QUOTE_TRANSLATION_TABLE) AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'translate' === file2bib.sh === id: 2611 author: Greenwood, William title: Confiscation; An Outline date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/2611.txt cache: ./cache/2611.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 2 resourceName b'2611.txt' Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/file2bib.py", line 107, in text = textacy.preprocessing.normalize.normalize_quotation_marks( text ) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/preprocessing/normalize.py", line 32, in normalize_quotation_marks return text.translate(QUOTE_TRANSLATION_TABLE) AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'translate' 28315 txt/../wrd/28315.wrd 27518 txt/../pos/27518.pos 22241 txt/../pos/22241.pos 20125 txt/../pos/20125.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 30432 author: Dickinson, G. Lowes (Goldsworthy Lowes) title: A Modern Symposium date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/30432.txt cache: ./cache/30432.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'30432.txt' 20125 txt/../wrd/20125.wrd 38086 txt/../pos/38086.pos 4212 txt/../pos/4212.pos 36014 txt/../ent/36014.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 20936 author: Rathenau, Walther title: The New Society date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/20936.txt cache: ./cache/20936.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'20936.txt' 22241 txt/../ent/22241.ent 4212 txt/../wrd/4212.wrd Traceback (most recent call last): File "/data-disk/reader-compute/reader-classic/bin/txt2keywords.py", line 54, in for keyword, score in ( yake( doc, ngrams=NGRAMS, topn=TOPN ) ) : File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 96, in yake word_scores = _compute_word_scores(doc, word_occ_vals, word_freqs, stop_words) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/site-packages/textacy/ke/yake.py", line 205, in _compute_word_scores freq_baseline = statistics.mean(freqs_nsw) + statistics.stdev(freqs_nsw) File "/data-disk/python/lib/python3.8/statistics.py", line 315, in mean raise StatisticsError('mean requires at least one data point') statistics.StatisticsError: mean requires at least one data point 3630 txt/../wrd/3630.wrd 27518 txt/../wrd/27518.wrd 22241 txt/../wrd/22241.wrd 38086 txt/../wrd/38086.wrd 3630 txt/../pos/3630.pos 1187 txt/../pos/1187.pos 1140 txt/../pos/1140.pos 32405 txt/../pos/32405.pos 19229 txt/../pos/19229.pos 3630 txt/../ent/3630.ent 38086 txt/../ent/38086.ent 42985 txt/../pos/42985.pos 1140 txt/../ent/1140.ent 6885 txt/../pos/6885.pos 1187 txt/../wrd/1187.wrd 42985 txt/../wrd/42985.wrd 27518 txt/../ent/27518.ent 20125 txt/../ent/20125.ent 4212 txt/../ent/4212.ent 28315 txt/../ent/28315.ent 32405 txt/../wrd/32405.wrd 19229 txt/../wrd/19229.wrd 6885 txt/../wrd/6885.wrd 22651 txt/../pos/22651.pos 1140 txt/../wrd/1140.wrd 19229 txt/../ent/19229.ent 36489 txt/../wrd/36489.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 36489 author: Howe, Julia Ward title: Modern Society date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/36489.txt cache: ./cache/36489.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'36489.txt' 36489 txt/../pos/36489.pos 1187 txt/../ent/1187.ent 22651 txt/../wrd/22651.wrd 32405 txt/../ent/32405.ent 6885 txt/../ent/6885.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 15487 author: Addams, Jane title: Democracy and Social Ethics date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/15487.txt cache: ./cache/15487.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'15487.txt' 42985 txt/../ent/42985.ent 46029 txt/../pos/46029.pos 38022 txt/../pos/38022.pos 36489 txt/../ent/36489.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 38086 author: Quesada, Ernesto title: The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/38086.txt cache: ./cache/38086.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'38086.txt' 22651 txt/../ent/22651.ent 46025 txt/../wrd/46025.wrd 46025 txt/../pos/46025.pos 38022 txt/../wrd/38022.wrd 46029 txt/../wrd/46029.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 1187 author: London, Jack title: War of the Classes date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/1187.txt cache: ./cache/1187.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'1187.txt' 38022 txt/../ent/38022.ent 46029 txt/../ent/46029.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 28315 author: Carleton, William title: One Way Out: A Middle-class New-Englander Emigrates to America date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/28315.txt cache: ./cache/28315.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'28315.txt' 46025 txt/../ent/46025.ent 15759 txt/../pos/15759.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 38022 author: Rice, Harvey title: Nature and Culture date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/38022.txt cache: ./cache/38022.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'38022.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 20125 author: Lippmann, Walter title: A Preface to Politics date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/20125.txt cache: ./cache/20125.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'20125.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 42985 author: Fleagle, Fred K. title: Social Problems in Porto Rico date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/42985.txt cache: ./cache/42985.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'42985.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 27518 author: Sturt, George title: Change in the Village date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/27518.txt cache: ./cache/27518.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'27518.txt' 15759 txt/../wrd/15759.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 6885 author: Rizal, José title: The Indolence of the Filipino date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/6885.txt cache: ./cache/6885.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'6885.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 36014 author: Bird, Isabella L. (Isabella Lucy) title: Notes on Old Edinburgh date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/36014.txt cache: ./cache/36014.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'36014.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 32405 author: Defoe, Daniel title: Augusta Triumphans Or, the Way to Make London the Most Flourishing City in the Universe date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/32405.txt cache: ./cache/32405.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'32405.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 22241 author: Lee, Gerald Stanley title: The Ghost in the White House Some suggestions as to how a hundred million people (who are supposed in a vague, helpless way to haunt the white house) can make themselves felt with a president, how they can back him up, express themselves to him, be expressed by him, and get what they want date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/22241.txt cache: ./cache/22241.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'22241.txt' 15759 txt/../ent/15759.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 3630 author: Tolstoy, Leo, graf title: What to Do? Thoughts Evoked by the Census of Moscow date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/3630.txt cache: ./cache/3630.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'3630.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 19229 author: Wells, H. G. (Herbert George) title: Anticipations Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon Human life and Thought date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/19229.txt cache: ./cache/19229.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'19229.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 1140 author: Carlyle, Thomas title: Latter-Day Pamphlets date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/1140.txt cache: ./cache/1140.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'1140.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 46029 author: Various title: Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part I. The People date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/46029.txt cache: ./cache/46029.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'46029.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 46025 author: Various title: Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part II. The Place and Its Social Forces date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/46025.txt cache: ./cache/46025.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'46025.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 15759 author: Lee, Gerald Stanley title: Crowds A Moving-Picture of Democracy date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/15759.txt cache: ./cache/15759.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'15759.txt' Done mapping. Reducing classification-HN-gutenberg === reduce.pl bib === id = 15487 author = Addams, Jane title = Democracy and Social Ethics date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 48515 sentences = 1829 flesch = 59 summary = school or to a college, whose family live in a house seen and known by more social claim; to urge that the boy go to work and support his individual and family codes, untouched by the larger social conceptions. with no special break or change in her family and social life. distinction between the value of family life for one set of people as A fuller social and domestic life among household employees would be only organized form of social life which the disheartened employee is social consciousness developing among working people. to a conception of social morality for his men and had imagined that school that it shall give the child's own experience a social value; The family has no social life in any expression of their moral or social life. the social life of the voter from the time he was a little boy and cache = ./cache/15487.txt txt = ./txt/15487.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 28315 author = Carleton, William title = One Way Out: A Middle-class New-Englander Emigrates to America date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 63900 sentences = 4466 flesch = 90 summary = like pretty important business men as we bought our paper on the car The boy grew like a weed and before I knew it he was five years old. own class I couldn't get; work as a young man I was too old to get; When the boy came home from school that night I had a long talk with her to do to wash the things every day, but she said it was a good But he came near it in a way he wasn't looking for later in the week. One of the hardest day's work I ever did in my life was killing time time in memorizing the common every day things a man would be likely this fact that men like Rafferty were busy from the time they landed "The thing I like about our life down here," she said to me one night, cache = ./cache/28315.txt txt = ./txt/28315.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 15759 author = Lee, Gerald Stanley title = Crowds A Moving-Picture of Democracy date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 177210 sentences = 8044 flesch = 78 summary = people in it, and were only that little, wonderful world a man lives Every man one knows can be seen doing his work in this world on a great living and acting as if they believed big things about people to-day, It makes another kind of man slowly out of thousands of men every day, The man who tells the most people what they shall be like in this world fresh, brand-new, great men, and in view of the fact, in a world like (1) The artist in business is the man who makes things people already A business man who merely makes for people what they want, the things that are in the way of what he wants; how the people look or way in this world--all these other people, of looking like us. to do things like this, men who can tell people news about themselves, cache = ./cache/15759.txt txt = ./txt/15759.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 30432 author = Dickinson, G. Lowes (Goldsworthy Lowes) title = A Modern Symposium date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 34363 sentences = 1989 flesch = 76 summary = made England great in the past; and I don't believe that a country will a nation for all time the form of its economic life, the type of its hand, they think, is that of the enthusiast; of the man who believes Men think the life of reason cold. "I don't quite know," he began, "why a mere man of science should be of need to speak for the living, for the new generation with which I the meaning of the world, the origin and destiny of the soul, the life to be anything better than a man of the world; but that those things should be valued as they are by men of the world is a thing that passes and wealth and great position, he concludes that the good life is he can become a good man; and then, whatever his powers, he will be cache = ./cache/30432.txt txt = ./txt/30432.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 22241 author = Lee, Gerald Stanley title = The Ghost in the White House Some suggestions as to how a hundred million people (who are supposed in a vague, helpless way to haunt the white house) can make themselves felt with a president, how they can back him up, express themselves to him, be expressed by him, and get what they want date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 76819 sentences = 3135 flesch = 73 summary = I have wanted to bring forward a way in which the things the new President thinking out ways in this book in which the hundred million people can imaginations, on making people want to fall into line in the right order. things for the people is that these ten men shall look after the other same machine is turned around and worked the other way, it makes people grave national crisis like this I do not want to tell other people what been written to express certain things a hundred million people want People who do not want to start to look at facts in this way which the people of this country are going to look in the men they allow national thing the hundred million people could be asked to do would be thing--people believe him and that if a business man does or says cache = ./cache/22241.txt txt = ./txt/22241.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 27518 author = Sturt, George title = Change in the Village date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 75594 sentences = 3303 flesch = 72 summary = to old-English cottage life I think I have not in twenty years met with corrupted and disgraced the village life, so that good men went wrong constant work which kept him from home all day--whose wife became a sort fairly good man can be got to do an ordinary day's work of nine hours in but as a general thing the parish where the peasant people lived was the comfortably or no, certainly the people's own home-work--to turn to that forthcoming; and whereas the old-time cottager out of work could sometimes comes upon a group of village children--little boys and girls the labouring people that their old home is no longer quite at their own recognized that a new thing has come into the country labourer's life, there was hardly a duty that the old-time village woman did, but was cottage women in the old days that work favoured such developments of cache = ./cache/27518.txt txt = ./txt/27518.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 29393 author = Clark, John Bates title = Social Justice Without Socialism date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 6226 sentences = 304 flesch = 72 summary = conditions of labor were deplorable before the Reform Bill was passed necessary to carry democracy into a social sphere in order to improve In a general way I should include public monopoly as well as private improvement and lessen the income on which the comfort of laborers in such evil which can be cited describes one possible reform, and the present state, measure the extent to which we can improve it by putting in a contest so aligned, victory for the former party means social A universal reduction of the period of labor would have to mean a with no diminution of wages; and the natural effect of increasing power Emergency employment is desperately needed when hard times come. true--"The good State is impossible under private capital." We claim of their own, or shares in boats, and that the laboring-class and the free play, will carry human life very far in the direction of the State cache = ./cache/29393.txt txt = ./txt/29393.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 18603 author = Sumner, William Graham title = What Social Classes Owe to Each Other date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 32998 sentences = 1567 flesch = 69 summary = existence of social classes is assumed as a simple fact. unquestioned doctrine in regard to social classes that "the rich" ought produced on the classes and society; or we may discuss the political whether legislation which forces one man to aid another is right and who does not contribute either by land, labor, or capital to the work class relations lies in the fact that our society, largely controlled on contract is a society of free and independent men, who form ties rights and turning his back on most of the duties of a civilized man, A free man in a free democracy has no duty whatever toward other men of earth, or above the natural state of human society. Undoubtedly the man who possesses capital has a great advantage over persons and classes to obtain control of the power of the State, so as social philosopher ought to think of before this man? cache = ./cache/18603.txt txt = ./txt/18603.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 19229 author = Wells, H. G. (Herbert George) title = Anticipations Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon Human life and Thought date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 81070 sentences = 2815 flesch = 54 summary = interesting phase in that great development of means of land transit things are possible at present, and none of which require any new shareholding class, the owners of a sort of property new in the world's specific new groups which may presently develop very distinctive shop, this new, great, and expanding body of mechanics and engineers intelligence, and probably a common-class consciousness--a new body, a example, of this probable development of a great mass of educated and will presently display new masses segregating from a great confusion, must the new order of men come into visibly organized existence through stage, into the higher organism, the world-state of the coming years. occasion comes, will the new class of capable men on which we have educated class, an unprecedented sort of people, a New Republic possible line of development of this New Republic in the coming time. future world state to which all things are pointing. cache = ./cache/19229.txt txt = ./txt/19229.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 20936 author = Rathenau, Walther title = The New Society date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 35340 sentences = 1515 flesch = 63 summary = hands of a political people does democracy mean the rule of the two, generations the power of work and the output of mechanism would general mass of needy people who will form the economic average of the education, culture and intellectuality on the old level; to this class In considering the spiritual and cultural life of a fully socialized The day is also far when the upper classes will come to their senses. shape for ourselves and for the world the new social order of freedom, that productive work, the elementary condition of life, the very form shall have been carried into effect, all true culture of the people mechanical and intellectual work are to be placed under the same more a culture of the classes but of the people, stands open to all by and a liberation of the spirit by the people; they put new life into cache = ./cache/20936.txt txt = ./txt/20936.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 22651 author = Leacock, Stephen title = The Unsolved Riddle of Social Justice date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 26716 sentences = 1469 flesch = 73 summary = work and in the meanest lives in the new world to-day there are elements what factor the effectiveness of human labor working with machinery has as if some peculiar social law were at work adjusting production to the human life, the destruction of things made with generations of labor, that was needed for social progress was hard work, more machinery, more "natural price" of capital representing the actual "productive power" of canon of social justice that covers and explains prices, wages, and clear the nature of social and industrial forces among which we live. industrial society can succeed in forcing up wages or prices as against Modern socialism is the direct outcome of the age of machine production. thing that is wrong with socialism is that it won't work. who cares to work with a fever of industry that even socialism cannot the wage-work of the modern industrial worker. cache = ./cache/22651.txt txt = ./txt/22651.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 20125 author = Lippmann, Walter title = A Preface to Politics date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 68011 sentences = 3776 flesch = 67 summary = invention of new political forms, the prevision of social wants, and the human nature and the changing social forces it generates are the very Social systems like ours, which do not even feed and house men and women, Certainly the human nature that figures in most political thinking is a discussion about politics and the inner life will sound like so much ways of looking at political problems." What matters the method, he will say why the study of human nature must serve politics, and to point out the child, so politics would build all of social life around the human stands between the actual life of men, their wishes and their needs, and think of the social evil as an answer to a human need, their researches needs,--turning churches into social reform organs and political rostra They are men who have lost faith in political socialism. cache = ./cache/20125.txt txt = ./txt/20125.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 3540 author = Tolstoy, Leo, graf title = The Census in Moscow date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 4260 sentences = 183 flesch = 72 summary = these two thousand young men to aid science, must do its work. manner." For men of science, the census has its interest; and for us with the census as thousands of people are now about to do, is to What does this census, that is about to be made, mean for us people of Moscow, who are not men of science? Science will do its work, let us perform ours also. that science has its task, and that we, on the occasion of this census, census-takers to the inhabitants in need of assistance, and work for them But, in my opinion, doing good and giving money are not only not error of thinking that the giving of money means doing good, arose from Let us, through these two thousand men, the interest of the good of these people, who, in our opinion, are in of the census, we shall continue our work of aid. cache = ./cache/3540.txt txt = ./txt/3540.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 3630 author = Tolstoy, Leo, graf title = What to Do? Thoughts Evoked by the Census of Moscow date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 80197 sentences = 3292 flesch = 72 summary = burnt out of their houses, or old people, or women with children; some, dealers, money-lenders, day-laborers, and people without any definite apartments in the house where people had been living for a long time. help, because they were working people, accustomed to labor and life of old men, of women, and of children of the working population, is people has expressed it; from the natural law of life, as we have called which the rich man lives: My luxurious life feeds people. lack of hands, and a throng of people, children, old men, and women, will men of art and science, under the pretext of a division of labor, live on to serve his own life and that of other people by his own labor. if men of art and science had taken as their aim the needs of the people; we effected in the life, in the labor, of the people? cache = ./cache/3630.txt txt = ./txt/3630.txt === reduce.pl bib === === reduce.pl bib === === reduce.pl bib === === reduce.pl bib === id = 1187 author = London, Jack title = War of the Classes date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 34654 sentences = 1793 flesch = 70 summary = is,--a world-wide class struggle between the propertyless workers and the the strong, energetic members of the working class have been able to rise labor took in wages the whole joint product, that capital would perish. Labor as a class is fighting with capital as meant the class of people without capital which sells its labor for a The second class-conscious capitalist organization is called the National of labor unions who are also members of the state militia shall resign Thus the generous laborer, giving more of a day's work for less return, striking at the food and shelter of the English capitalist and laborer. But the union laborers of the United States have nothing of which to For, over all these trades, over all these thousands of men, is the Labor employers of labor in this city are generally against the trade-union Socialist, the trade-union, and other working-class organizations are cache = ./cache/1187.txt txt = ./txt/1187.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 1140 author = Carlyle, Thomas title = Latter-Day Pamphlets date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 74850 sentences = 3203 flesch = 68 summary = rule for human things, there will not anywhere be want of work for the In times when men love wisdom, the old man will New Era, and long-expected Year One of Perfect Human Felicity has one thing requisite, That the man or nation can discern what the true What great human soul, what great thought, what great noble thing that England must herself again, in these new strange times, the old methods this world, and one wise man is stronger than all men unwise, they can Scoundrel, him whom of all men the gods liked worst, solemnly laid hold this, human pity shall fall silent, and man be stern as his Master and in Downing Street, governing us, are not abler men since the Reform now has the honor to"--Good Heavens, if it were not that men generally human creatures; and from the Nature's Fact, continuing quite silently cache = ./cache/1140.txt txt = ./txt/1140.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 36489 author = Howe, Julia Ward title = Modern Society date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 20372 sentences = 1173 flesch = 74 summary = The opposite extremes of human nature embrace, between them, a wonderful Let us look at modern society in Cairo, Shepherd's hotel, and to-day than in any preceding age of the world's history. American women with money are at a premium in fashionable Europe. and beauty of English country-life, the literary and artistic resources the time of Luther, but the fact for which it stands is as old as human I have seen in this time a great growth in the direction of liberal the study of this question, which so regards the very life of society. In our America, ay, even in our Puritan New England, the day has come in The greatest trouble with human society is, that its natural tendency In this day of the world hope is so strong, and the desire for an a place amongst the great poems of our time. cache = ./cache/36489.txt txt = ./txt/36489.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 38022 author = Rice, Harvey title = Nature and Culture date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 47049 sentences = 2141 flesch = 66 summary = The Ages of Nature, so far as relates to the earth, may be classed achieved, then with our earth-life will come moral elevation, and with He only is a man in the true sense whose mental, moral, and physical It is to be hoped the time will soon come when all our public schools, In fact, each State should be regarded as one great school-district, successful, in order to achieve high aims, the laboring man must not In the elements of his physical nature, man is truly "of the earth And yet man in his moral nature, though created but "a little lower than In the Western States, where Nature educates men on a liberal scale by It is true that every marriageable woman has a natural right to select, a natural right, and should be accorded to every human being, the world of the great and powerful nations of the earth. cache = ./cache/38022.txt txt = ./txt/38022.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 38086 author = Quesada, Ernesto title = The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 9993 sentences = 413 flesch = 53 summary = THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] nation like the Argentine Republic, to give some idea of the nature of The Spanish settlements on the other hand presented different of the races produced very definite results and the creole population of present province of Corrientes, constituted the mass of the population, of Spanish population set in the midst of a savage country. the national government in order to give to the whole country a common The social evolution of the Argentine Republic has finally found its From this point of view the present moment in the evolution of Argentine to form the national spirit of the future type of Argentine citizen, is The present social tendencies in Argentine evolution give promise of a crown during the Spanish Colonial period, of a certain number of native cache = ./cache/38086.txt txt = ./txt/38086.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 42985 author = Fleagle, Fred K. title = Social Problems in Porto Rico date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 36929 sentences = 1727 flesch = 67 summary = author in his work in rural sociology in the University of Porto Rico, Of the population of Porto Rico in 1910, about 75 per cent lived in that the great majority of the people of Porto Rico should be classified In Porto Rico we find the average family consisting of five people, and The number of persons of illegitimate birth in the Island of Porto Rico, population in Porto Rico is to be found in the towns, where the school small number of children in the rural schools has given little The great mass of the rural laborers live in houses The average unskilled laborer in the country districts of Porto Rico An increase in the number of rural schools so that all of the children has to face in Porto Rico is the problem of the rural schools. The rural schools of Porto Rico are already under the cache = ./cache/42985.txt txt = ./txt/42985.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 46025 author = Various title = Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part II. The Place and Its Social Forces date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 84871 sentences = 4163 flesch = 65 summary = mortality, school hygiene, street cleaning, tenement house sanitation, thirteen years' work," said Mr. Benson, who was in New York at the time [Illustration: PITTSBURGH FROM THE SOUTH SIDE--A CITY OF CONTRASTS.] Forbes street and Fifth avenue run east from the jail and court house usually plenty of time to stop; but for city streets and Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, for the city to construct and control it, as in New York, The city of Pittsburgh at the time of this survey possessed six private during the past ten years to place the charitable work of Pittsburgh In new tenement houses an independent water supply is required for Comparing Pittsburgh's housing laws with the new building code of A visitor not long since was in a new tenement house in Pittsburgh, [Illustration: ONE PITTSBURGH TYPE OF ONE-FAMILY HOUSE. on general housing conditions in Pittsburgh was published by the cache = ./cache/46025.txt txt = ./txt/46025.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 46029 author = Various title = Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part I. The People date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 81405 sentences = 4122 flesch = 72 summary = In New York city two years ago we raised a great outcry about child No American city presents in a more clear-cut way than Pittsburgh the by helping the landlady in her house work, the man saved room rent. The men find that it costs more to live, too, when working in the mills, New York as a boy of eighteen years, and worked for a short time as a twelve hours a day at some work, while if every man in the country working sons lived at home, besides four younger children. Pittsburgh as a city of working women. readjustment, to see Pittsburgh as a city of working women. Pittsburgh and the neighboring mill towns they live and work. in the steel industry in Pittsburgh has been, for fifteen years, towards workers; and the men work not six days, but seven a week. cache = ./cache/46029.txt txt = ./txt/46029.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 6885 author = Rizal, José title = The Indolence of the Filipino date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 15909 sentences = 671 flesch = 65 summary = Philippines, has demonstrated that such indolence does not exist, and The fact is that in tropical countries violent work is not a good of patient, Philippines; instead of malady, indolence. up at another time, speaks of China's relations with the islands, mines and washings of gold, and peopled with natives," as Morga says; "The natives," says Morga, in chapter VII, speaking of native of ancient times converted into the lazy and indolent Christian, which exists in the Philippines toward indolence, and which must the Philippine youth embarked for the expedition, saying good-by to two countries with which the Philippines continued to have relations time went to China, not even gold, for in those years the Chinese The sordid return the native gets from his work has the effect of references to the decline of the native industries of the Philippines The decrease of population among native people in the Philippines cache = ./cache/6885.txt txt = ./txt/6885.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 36014 author = Bird, Isabella L. (Isabella Lucy) title = Notes on Old Edinburgh date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 14262 sentences = 785 flesch = 78 summary = High Street, Cowgate, and West Port, going by "house-row." In all cases We followed this water grievance into thirty-seven houses that day, and of father, mother, and child of three years old, were fighting a hard women said, were the children of parents too poor to provide them with wife, to come down the dark filthy stair late at night with the occupiers were a very decent-looking man, seventy-six years old, by trade man had to bring the water up the long dark stair. two children, living in a room, requiring a candle at mid-day, 12 feet by two children, sleeping in a large bed in a room 11 feet by 9 feet, with a Three adults and six children in a room 12 feet by 10 children; room, 14 feet by 15 feet; rent, £3, 18s. closes and the street, and that there was no sign that the night had come, cache = ./cache/36014.txt txt = ./txt/36014.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 32405 author = Defoe, Daniel title = Augusta Triumphans Or, the Way to Make London the Most Flourishing City in the Universe date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 13149 sentences = 502 flesch = 69 summary = A man who has the public good in view, ought not in the least to be Upon second thought, I think colleges for university education might be murder of their bastard children; and, to the shame of good government, gives wicked murderers means to escape and commit fresh sins, to which Fields; nay, Punch's opera may pass for a lower kind of academy. persons when out of place, or living too long on their own hands, our sure it is high time to begin the work, by clearing the public streets barbarous abuse of the holy marriage state, to send him to the house of When by this means a wicked husband has driven a poor creature mad, and murder is connived at, we shall no doubt have enough, nay, too much of If a housekeeper break, or a house is empty, the poor watchman ought not cache = ./cache/32405.txt txt = ./txt/32405.txt Building ./etc/reader.txt 15759 19229 3630 15759 46025 46029 number of items: 28 sum of words: 1,244,662 average size in words: 49,786 average readability score: 69 nouns: people; men; man; life; world; day; work; time; way; things; years; thing; business; labor; city; one; country; children; money; class; fact; women; power; nothing; part; something; others; place; kind; society; year; house; nature; family; order; conditions; mind; self; school; government; nation; course; point; woman; sense; matter; state; capital; case; spirit verbs: is; be; are; have; was; has; had; do; were; been; make; made; being; see; get; say; does; did; come; know; go; said; think; take; going; find; done; want; found; let; give; put; work; live; become; believe; am; look; making; doing; having; came; seen; keep; getting; given; seems; taken; called; working adjectives: other; great; new; own; little; many; good; more; such; social; old; human; same; first; few; much; public; true; whole; certain; poor; last; possible; present; most; political; small; real; better; american; least; general; best; common; modern; industrial; moral; long; large; next; young; necessary; high; able; big; different; free; only; natural; second adverbs: not; so; up; only; more; out; now; as; very; then; even; most; n''t; too; here; well; still; down; just; never; all; there; far; much; on; always; really; ever; perhaps; also; yet; once; again; almost; together; away; long; in; over; often; quite; back; off; rather; first; however; enough; merely; thus; at pronouns: it; i; he; they; we; his; their; them; its; our; him; you; my; us; her; me; she; themselves; himself; itself; one; your; myself; ourselves; herself; yourself; ours; theirs; mine; thy; oneself; thee; ''em; yours; ''s; hers; thyself; yourselves; ye; humanity,--the; em; yer; work,--you; with,--the; whence; trodden; theme,--the; tenements,"--that; science,--the; said,--"they proper nouns: _; pittsburgh; america; mr.; god; new; england; president; united; states; york; english; house; ruth; porto; london; heaven; europe; street; state; rico; american; nature; company; germany; parliament; |; allegheny; government; chicago; carnegie; league; sunday; commission; man; island; john; republic; south; society; boston; dr.; cross; chapter; labor; christ; east; red; americans; office keywords: man; work; people; new; world; time; life; great; good; thing; american; mr.; god; england; day; woman; united; states; social; labor; child; america; year; state; nature; human; europe; english; class; york; way; street; society; look; london; house; chicago; carnegie; british; wilson; sunday; spanish; school; republic; price; president; pittsburgh; old; moscow; money one topic; one dimension: people file(s): ./cache/15487.txt titles(s): Democracy and Social Ethics three topics; one dimension: people; man; pittsburgh file(s): ./cache/15759.txt, ./cache/3630.txt, ./cache/46025.txt titles(s): Crowds A Moving-Picture of Democracy | What to Do? Thoughts Evoked by the Census of Moscow | Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part II. The Place and Its Social Forces five topics; three dimensions: man people men; men social life; people men man; pittsburgh city work; vendors them_ brotherly file(s): ./cache/1140.txt, ./cache/20936.txt, ./cache/15759.txt, ./cache/46025.txt, titles(s): Latter-Day Pamphlets | The New Society | Crowds A Moving-Picture of Democracy | Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part II. The Place and Its Social Forces | Proposed Roads to Freedom Type: gutenberg title: classification-HN-gutenberg date: 2021-05-29 time: 00:05 username: emorgan patron: Eric Morgan email: emorgan@nd.edu input: classification:"HN" ==== make-pages.sh htm files ==== make-pages.sh complex files ==== make-pages.sh named enities ==== making bibliographics id: 15487 author: Addams, Jane title: Democracy and Social Ethics date: words: 48515.0 sentences: 1829.0 pages: flesch: 59.0 cache: ./cache/15487.txt txt: ./txt/15487.txt summary: school or to a college, whose family live in a house seen and known by more social claim; to urge that the boy go to work and support his individual and family codes, untouched by the larger social conceptions. with no special break or change in her family and social life. distinction between the value of family life for one set of people as A fuller social and domestic life among household employees would be only organized form of social life which the disheartened employee is social consciousness developing among working people. to a conception of social morality for his men and had imagined that school that it shall give the child''s own experience a social value; The family has no social life in any expression of their moral or social life. the social life of the voter from the time he was a little boy and id: 4212 author: Arnold, Matthew title: Culture and Anarchy date: words: nan sentences: nan pages: flesch: nan cache: txt: summary: id: 36014 author: Bird, Isabella L. (Isabella Lucy) title: Notes on Old Edinburgh date: words: 14262.0 sentences: 785.0 pages: flesch: 78.0 cache: ./cache/36014.txt txt: ./txt/36014.txt summary: High Street, Cowgate, and West Port, going by "house-row." In all cases We followed this water grievance into thirty-seven houses that day, and of father, mother, and child of three years old, were fighting a hard women said, were the children of parents too poor to provide them with wife, to come down the dark filthy stair late at night with the occupiers were a very decent-looking man, seventy-six years old, by trade man had to bring the water up the long dark stair. two children, living in a room, requiring a candle at mid-day, 12 feet by two children, sleeping in a large bed in a room 11 feet by 9 feet, with a Three adults and six children in a room 12 feet by 10 children; room, 14 feet by 15 feet; rent, £3, 18s. closes and the street, and that there was no sign that the night had come, id: 28315 author: Carleton, William title: One Way Out: A Middle-class New-Englander Emigrates to America date: words: 63900.0 sentences: 4466.0 pages: flesch: 90.0 cache: ./cache/28315.txt txt: ./txt/28315.txt summary: like pretty important business men as we bought our paper on the car The boy grew like a weed and before I knew it he was five years old. own class I couldn''t get; work as a young man I was too old to get; When the boy came home from school that night I had a long talk with her to do to wash the things every day, but she said it was a good But he came near it in a way he wasn''t looking for later in the week. One of the hardest day''s work I ever did in my life was killing time time in memorizing the common every day things a man would be likely this fact that men like Rafferty were busy from the time they landed "The thing I like about our life down here," she said to me one night, id: 1140 author: Carlyle, Thomas title: Latter-Day Pamphlets date: words: 74850.0 sentences: 3203.0 pages: flesch: 68.0 cache: ./cache/1140.txt txt: ./txt/1140.txt summary: rule for human things, there will not anywhere be want of work for the In times when men love wisdom, the old man will New Era, and long-expected Year One of Perfect Human Felicity has one thing requisite, That the man or nation can discern what the true What great human soul, what great thought, what great noble thing that England must herself again, in these new strange times, the old methods this world, and one wise man is stronger than all men unwise, they can Scoundrel, him whom of all men the gods liked worst, solemnly laid hold this, human pity shall fall silent, and man be stern as his Master and in Downing Street, governing us, are not abler men since the Reform now has the honor to"--Good Heavens, if it were not that men generally human creatures; and from the Nature''s Fact, continuing quite silently id: 29393 author: Clark, John Bates title: Social Justice Without Socialism date: words: 6226.0 sentences: 304.0 pages: flesch: 72.0 cache: ./cache/29393.txt txt: ./txt/29393.txt summary: conditions of labor were deplorable before the Reform Bill was passed necessary to carry democracy into a social sphere in order to improve In a general way I should include public monopoly as well as private improvement and lessen the income on which the comfort of laborers in such evil which can be cited describes one possible reform, and the present state, measure the extent to which we can improve it by putting in a contest so aligned, victory for the former party means social A universal reduction of the period of labor would have to mean a with no diminution of wages; and the natural effect of increasing power Emergency employment is desperately needed when hard times come. true--"The good State is impossible under private capital." We claim of their own, or shares in boats, and that the laboring-class and the free play, will carry human life very far in the direction of the State id: 32405 author: Defoe, Daniel title: Augusta Triumphans Or, the Way to Make London the Most Flourishing City in the Universe date: words: 13149.0 sentences: 502.0 pages: flesch: 69.0 cache: ./cache/32405.txt txt: ./txt/32405.txt summary: A man who has the public good in view, ought not in the least to be Upon second thought, I think colleges for university education might be murder of their bastard children; and, to the shame of good government, gives wicked murderers means to escape and commit fresh sins, to which Fields; nay, Punch''s opera may pass for a lower kind of academy. persons when out of place, or living too long on their own hands, our sure it is high time to begin the work, by clearing the public streets barbarous abuse of the holy marriage state, to send him to the house of When by this means a wicked husband has driven a poor creature mad, and murder is connived at, we shall no doubt have enough, nay, too much of If a housekeeper break, or a house is empty, the poor watchman ought not id: 30432 author: Dickinson, G. Lowes (Goldsworthy Lowes) title: A Modern Symposium date: words: 34363.0 sentences: 1989.0 pages: flesch: 76.0 cache: ./cache/30432.txt txt: ./txt/30432.txt summary: made England great in the past; and I don''t believe that a country will a nation for all time the form of its economic life, the type of its hand, they think, is that of the enthusiast; of the man who believes Men think the life of reason cold. "I don''t quite know," he began, "why a mere man of science should be of need to speak for the living, for the new generation with which I the meaning of the world, the origin and destiny of the soul, the life to be anything better than a man of the world; but that those things should be valued as they are by men of the world is a thing that passes and wealth and great position, he concludes that the good life is he can become a good man; and then, whatever his powers, he will be id: 42985 author: Fleagle, Fred K. title: Social Problems in Porto Rico date: words: 36929.0 sentences: 1727.0 pages: flesch: 67.0 cache: ./cache/42985.txt txt: ./txt/42985.txt summary: author in his work in rural sociology in the University of Porto Rico, Of the population of Porto Rico in 1910, about 75 per cent lived in that the great majority of the people of Porto Rico should be classified In Porto Rico we find the average family consisting of five people, and The number of persons of illegitimate birth in the Island of Porto Rico, population in Porto Rico is to be found in the towns, where the school small number of children in the rural schools has given little The great mass of the rural laborers live in houses The average unskilled laborer in the country districts of Porto Rico An increase in the number of rural schools so that all of the children has to face in Porto Rico is the problem of the rural schools. The rural schools of Porto Rico are already under the id: 2611 author: Greenwood, William title: Confiscation; An Outline date: words: nan sentences: nan pages: flesch: nan cache: txt: summary: id: 36489 author: Howe, Julia Ward title: Modern Society date: words: 20372.0 sentences: 1173.0 pages: flesch: 74.0 cache: ./cache/36489.txt txt: ./txt/36489.txt summary: The opposite extremes of human nature embrace, between them, a wonderful Let us look at modern society in Cairo, Shepherd''s hotel, and to-day than in any preceding age of the world''s history. American women with money are at a premium in fashionable Europe. and beauty of English country-life, the literary and artistic resources the time of Luther, but the fact for which it stands is as old as human I have seen in this time a great growth in the direction of liberal the study of this question, which so regards the very life of society. In our America, ay, even in our Puritan New England, the day has come in The greatest trouble with human society is, that its natural tendency In this day of the world hope is so strong, and the desire for an a place amongst the great poems of our time. id: 22651 author: Leacock, Stephen title: The Unsolved Riddle of Social Justice date: words: 26716.0 sentences: 1469.0 pages: flesch: 73.0 cache: ./cache/22651.txt txt: ./txt/22651.txt summary: work and in the meanest lives in the new world to-day there are elements what factor the effectiveness of human labor working with machinery has as if some peculiar social law were at work adjusting production to the human life, the destruction of things made with generations of labor, that was needed for social progress was hard work, more machinery, more "natural price" of capital representing the actual "productive power" of canon of social justice that covers and explains prices, wages, and clear the nature of social and industrial forces among which we live. industrial society can succeed in forcing up wages or prices as against Modern socialism is the direct outcome of the age of machine production. thing that is wrong with socialism is that it won''t work. who cares to work with a fever of industry that even socialism cannot the wage-work of the modern industrial worker. id: 15759 author: Lee, Gerald Stanley title: Crowds A Moving-Picture of Democracy date: words: 177210.0 sentences: 8044.0 pages: flesch: 78.0 cache: ./cache/15759.txt txt: ./txt/15759.txt summary: people in it, and were only that little, wonderful world a man lives Every man one knows can be seen doing his work in this world on a great living and acting as if they believed big things about people to-day, It makes another kind of man slowly out of thousands of men every day, The man who tells the most people what they shall be like in this world fresh, brand-new, great men, and in view of the fact, in a world like (1) The artist in business is the man who makes things people already A business man who merely makes for people what they want, the things that are in the way of what he wants; how the people look or way in this world--all these other people, of looking like us. to do things like this, men who can tell people news about themselves, id: 22241 author: Lee, Gerald Stanley title: The Ghost in the White House Some suggestions as to how a hundred million people (who are supposed in a vague, helpless way to haunt the white house) can make themselves felt with a president, how they can back him up, express themselves to him, be expressed by him, and get what they want date: words: 76819.0 sentences: 3135.0 pages: flesch: 73.0 cache: ./cache/22241.txt txt: ./txt/22241.txt summary: I have wanted to bring forward a way in which the things the new President thinking out ways in this book in which the hundred million people can imaginations, on making people want to fall into line in the right order. things for the people is that these ten men shall look after the other same machine is turned around and worked the other way, it makes people grave national crisis like this I do not want to tell other people what been written to express certain things a hundred million people want People who do not want to start to look at facts in this way which the people of this country are going to look in the men they allow national thing the hundred million people could be asked to do would be thing--people believe him and that if a business man does or says id: 20125 author: Lippmann, Walter title: A Preface to Politics date: words: 68011.0 sentences: 3776.0 pages: flesch: 67.0 cache: ./cache/20125.txt txt: ./txt/20125.txt summary: invention of new political forms, the prevision of social wants, and the human nature and the changing social forces it generates are the very Social systems like ours, which do not even feed and house men and women, Certainly the human nature that figures in most political thinking is a discussion about politics and the inner life will sound like so much ways of looking at political problems." What matters the method, he will say why the study of human nature must serve politics, and to point out the child, so politics would build all of social life around the human stands between the actual life of men, their wishes and their needs, and think of the social evil as an answer to a human need, their researches needs,--turning churches into social reform organs and political rostra They are men who have lost faith in political socialism. id: 1187 author: London, Jack title: War of the Classes date: words: 34654.0 sentences: 1793.0 pages: flesch: 70.0 cache: ./cache/1187.txt txt: ./txt/1187.txt summary: is,--a world-wide class struggle between the propertyless workers and the the strong, energetic members of the working class have been able to rise labor took in wages the whole joint product, that capital would perish. Labor as a class is fighting with capital as meant the class of people without capital which sells its labor for a The second class-conscious capitalist organization is called the National of labor unions who are also members of the state militia shall resign Thus the generous laborer, giving more of a day''s work for less return, striking at the food and shelter of the English capitalist and laborer. But the union laborers of the United States have nothing of which to For, over all these trades, over all these thousands of men, is the Labor employers of labor in this city are generally against the trade-union Socialist, the trade-union, and other working-class organizations are id: 38086 author: Quesada, Ernesto title: The Social Evolution of the Argentine Republic date: words: 9993.0 sentences: 413.0 pages: flesch: 53.0 cache: ./cache/38086.txt txt: ./txt/38086.txt summary: THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] THE SOCIAL EVOLUTION OF THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC[1] nation like the Argentine Republic, to give some idea of the nature of The Spanish settlements on the other hand presented different of the races produced very definite results and the creole population of present province of Corrientes, constituted the mass of the population, of Spanish population set in the midst of a savage country. the national government in order to give to the whole country a common The social evolution of the Argentine Republic has finally found its From this point of view the present moment in the evolution of Argentine to form the national spirit of the future type of Argentine citizen, is The present social tendencies in Argentine evolution give promise of a crown during the Spanish Colonial period, of a certain number of native id: 20936 author: Rathenau, Walther title: The New Society date: words: 35340.0 sentences: 1515.0 pages: flesch: 63.0 cache: ./cache/20936.txt txt: ./txt/20936.txt summary: hands of a political people does democracy mean the rule of the two, generations the power of work and the output of mechanism would general mass of needy people who will form the economic average of the education, culture and intellectuality on the old level; to this class In considering the spiritual and cultural life of a fully socialized The day is also far when the upper classes will come to their senses. shape for ourselves and for the world the new social order of freedom, that productive work, the elementary condition of life, the very form shall have been carried into effect, all true culture of the people mechanical and intellectual work are to be placed under the same more a culture of the classes but of the people, stands open to all by and a liberation of the spirit by the people; they put new life into id: 38022 author: Rice, Harvey title: Nature and Culture date: words: 47049.0 sentences: 2141.0 pages: flesch: 66.0 cache: ./cache/38022.txt txt: ./txt/38022.txt summary: The Ages of Nature, so far as relates to the earth, may be classed achieved, then with our earth-life will come moral elevation, and with He only is a man in the true sense whose mental, moral, and physical It is to be hoped the time will soon come when all our public schools, In fact, each State should be regarded as one great school-district, successful, in order to achieve high aims, the laboring man must not In the elements of his physical nature, man is truly "of the earth And yet man in his moral nature, though created but "a little lower than In the Western States, where Nature educates men on a liberal scale by It is true that every marriageable woman has a natural right to select, a natural right, and should be accorded to every human being, the world of the great and powerful nations of the earth. id: 6885 author: Rizal, José title: The Indolence of the Filipino date: words: 15909.0 sentences: 671.0 pages: flesch: 65.0 cache: ./cache/6885.txt txt: ./txt/6885.txt summary: Philippines, has demonstrated that such indolence does not exist, and The fact is that in tropical countries violent work is not a good of patient, Philippines; instead of malady, indolence. up at another time, speaks of China''s relations with the islands, mines and washings of gold, and peopled with natives," as Morga says; "The natives," says Morga, in chapter VII, speaking of native of ancient times converted into the lazy and indolent Christian, which exists in the Philippines toward indolence, and which must the Philippine youth embarked for the expedition, saying good-by to two countries with which the Philippines continued to have relations time went to China, not even gold, for in those years the Chinese The sordid return the native gets from his work has the effect of references to the decline of the native industries of the Philippines The decrease of population among native people in the Philippines id: 690 author: Russell, Bertrand title: Proposed Roads to Freedom date: words: nan sentences: nan pages: flesch: nan cache: txt: summary: id: 27518 author: Sturt, George title: Change in the Village date: words: 75594.0 sentences: 3303.0 pages: flesch: 72.0 cache: ./cache/27518.txt txt: ./txt/27518.txt summary: to old-English cottage life I think I have not in twenty years met with corrupted and disgraced the village life, so that good men went wrong constant work which kept him from home all day--whose wife became a sort fairly good man can be got to do an ordinary day''s work of nine hours in but as a general thing the parish where the peasant people lived was the comfortably or no, certainly the people''s own home-work--to turn to that forthcoming; and whereas the old-time cottager out of work could sometimes comes upon a group of village children--little boys and girls the labouring people that their old home is no longer quite at their own recognized that a new thing has come into the country labourer''s life, there was hardly a duty that the old-time village woman did, but was cottage women in the old days that work favoured such developments of id: 18603 author: Sumner, William Graham title: What Social Classes Owe to Each Other date: words: 32998.0 sentences: 1567.0 pages: flesch: 69.0 cache: ./cache/18603.txt txt: ./txt/18603.txt summary: existence of social classes is assumed as a simple fact. unquestioned doctrine in regard to social classes that "the rich" ought produced on the classes and society; or we may discuss the political whether legislation which forces one man to aid another is right and who does not contribute either by land, labor, or capital to the work class relations lies in the fact that our society, largely controlled on contract is a society of free and independent men, who form ties rights and turning his back on most of the duties of a civilized man, A free man in a free democracy has no duty whatever toward other men of earth, or above the natural state of human society. Undoubtedly the man who possesses capital has a great advantage over persons and classes to obtain control of the power of the State, so as social philosopher ought to think of before this man? id: 3540 author: Tolstoy, Leo, graf title: The Census in Moscow date: words: 4260.0 sentences: 183.0 pages: flesch: 72.0 cache: ./cache/3540.txt txt: ./txt/3540.txt summary: these two thousand young men to aid science, must do its work. manner." For men of science, the census has its interest; and for us with the census as thousands of people are now about to do, is to What does this census, that is about to be made, mean for us people of Moscow, who are not men of science? Science will do its work, let us perform ours also. that science has its task, and that we, on the occasion of this census, census-takers to the inhabitants in need of assistance, and work for them But, in my opinion, doing good and giving money are not only not error of thinking that the giving of money means doing good, arose from Let us, through these two thousand men, the interest of the good of these people, who, in our opinion, are in of the census, we shall continue our work of aid. id: 3630 author: Tolstoy, Leo, graf title: What to Do? Thoughts Evoked by the Census of Moscow date: words: 80197.0 sentences: 3292.0 pages: flesch: 72.0 cache: ./cache/3630.txt txt: ./txt/3630.txt summary: burnt out of their houses, or old people, or women with children; some, dealers, money-lenders, day-laborers, and people without any definite apartments in the house where people had been living for a long time. help, because they were working people, accustomed to labor and life of old men, of women, and of children of the working population, is people has expressed it; from the natural law of life, as we have called which the rich man lives: My luxurious life feeds people. lack of hands, and a throng of people, children, old men, and women, will men of art and science, under the pretext of a division of labor, live on to serve his own life and that of other people by his own labor. if men of art and science had taken as their aim the needs of the people; we effected in the life, in the labor, of the people? id: 46025 author: Various title: Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part II. The Place and Its Social Forces date: words: 84871.0 sentences: 4163.0 pages: flesch: 65.0 cache: ./cache/46025.txt txt: ./txt/46025.txt summary: mortality, school hygiene, street cleaning, tenement house sanitation, thirteen years'' work," said Mr. Benson, who was in New York at the time [Illustration: PITTSBURGH FROM THE SOUTH SIDE--A CITY OF CONTRASTS.] Forbes street and Fifth avenue run east from the jail and court house usually plenty of time to stop; but for city streets and Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, for the city to construct and control it, as in New York, The city of Pittsburgh at the time of this survey possessed six private during the past ten years to place the charitable work of Pittsburgh In new tenement houses an independent water supply is required for Comparing Pittsburgh''s housing laws with the new building code of A visitor not long since was in a new tenement house in Pittsburgh, [Illustration: ONE PITTSBURGH TYPE OF ONE-FAMILY HOUSE. on general housing conditions in Pittsburgh was published by the id: 46029 author: Various title: Charities and the Commons: The Pittsburgh Survey, Part I. The People date: words: 81405.0 sentences: 4122.0 pages: flesch: 72.0 cache: ./cache/46029.txt txt: ./txt/46029.txt summary: In New York city two years ago we raised a great outcry about child No American city presents in a more clear-cut way than Pittsburgh the by helping the landlady in her house work, the man saved room rent. The men find that it costs more to live, too, when working in the mills, New York as a boy of eighteen years, and worked for a short time as a twelve hours a day at some work, while if every man in the country working sons lived at home, besides four younger children. Pittsburgh as a city of working women. readjustment, to see Pittsburgh as a city of working women. Pittsburgh and the neighboring mill towns they live and work. in the steel industry in Pittsburgh has been, for fifteen years, towards workers; and the men work not six days, but seven a week. id: 19229 author: Wells, H. G. (Herbert George) title: Anticipations Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon Human life and Thought date: words: 81070.0 sentences: 2815.0 pages: flesch: 54.0 cache: ./cache/19229.txt txt: ./txt/19229.txt summary: interesting phase in that great development of means of land transit things are possible at present, and none of which require any new shareholding class, the owners of a sort of property new in the world''s specific new groups which may presently develop very distinctive shop, this new, great, and expanding body of mechanics and engineers intelligence, and probably a common-class consciousness--a new body, a example, of this probable development of a great mass of educated and will presently display new masses segregating from a great confusion, must the new order of men come into visibly organized existence through stage, into the higher organism, the world-state of the coming years. occasion comes, will the new class of capable men on which we have educated class, an unprecedented sort of people, a New Republic possible line of development of this New Republic in the coming time. future world state to which all things are pointing. ==== make-pages.sh questions ==== make-pages.sh search ==== make-pages.sh topic modeling corpus Zipping study carrel